DVD Review: Children of Men
Universal Movie •••½ Picture •••• Sound ••••½ Extras •••• |
Cuarón uses this complex setup to present a series of imaginative images and set pieces. From London streets to safe houses in the country, everything wears a patina of grime and disarray. These are dark times - and shot to look like it, with lots of handheld camera work and a slightly grainy look that's meant to punctuate the urgency and up the authenticity quotient. Fortunately, the transfer offers a fine level of detail amidst the shadows, and no digital distortion worth noting when the camera jumps around. For similar artistic reasons, Cuarón keeps the color palette fairly compressed, eliminating any bright, bouncy hues, leaving images of subdued tones and lots of grays. Again, the disc is more than up to the challenge.
Sonically, too, the disc excels. There's the usual flurry of surround-channel activity during the chase scenes and boffo action sequences, and it's all quite involving. However, I was most impressed with the subtlety of the sound design. Raindrops and nature effects, street sounds and off-camera dialogue all pop in and out of the mix with a great degree of realism - and lots of spacing between the channels, both front and rear.
The extras are more involving than most - particularly for those who love the nuts and bolts of filmmaking. Five different featurettes that cover production design and special effects also provide fairly comprehensive deconstructions of two of the action sequences. When interviewed, costars Clive Owen and Julianne Moore avoid the usual Hollywood drivel and actually talk a bit about their characters. There are also three deleted scenes that don't add much, and a short feature wherein some noted academics and "futurists" discuss the themes in the film. [R] English, French, and Spanish, Dolby Digital 5.1; letterboxed (1.85:1) and anamorphic widescreen; dual layer.
more Entertainment reviews Back to Homepage What's New on S&V
- Log in or register to post comments